Roughly described, an awg has two or more inputs and multiple outputs. By selecting the angular spacing among the inputs, and by designing the different inputs to address different orders of the waveguide array, the device can be designed such that the inputs will carry frequency bands having any desired center frequency spacing and any desired same or different channel spacing. For example a dual input device can be designed such that one input carries C-band channels and the other input carries L-band channels, and both have channel spacings that match or substantially match the ITU grid.
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22. A method for operating an awg having first and second inputs and a plurality of outputs, the first and second inputs being addressed to respective first and second different orders of the awg, comprising the step of providing optical energy into both the first and second inputs simultaneously.
23. A system comprising a first awg having a plurality of inputs and a set of at least first and second outputs and a second awg having at least first and second inputs and a plurality of outputs, for use with a transmission path carrying first optical energy from the first output of the first awg to the first input of the second awg and from the second output of the first awg to the second input of the second awg,
wherein the first and second outputs of the first awg address respectively first and second different orders of the first awg such that optical energy carried on the first output of the first awg has a plurality of channels having first desired channel spacing and a first desired center frequency and at the same time optical energy carried on the second output of the first awg has a plurality of channels having second desired channel spacing and a second desired center frequency; and
wherein the first and second inputs of the second awg address respectively first and second different orders of the second awg such that optical energy carried on the first input of the second awg has a plurality of channels having the first channel spacing and the first center frequency and at the same time optical energy carried on the second input of the second awg has a plurality of channels having the second channel spacing and the second center frequency.
1. Arrayed waveguide grating apparatus comprising an input free-space region, an output free-space region, and an array of waveguides from the input free-space region to the output free-space region, the output free space region having a far boundary disposed across the output free space region from the array,
wherein the input free-space region has an input port comprising at least first and second inputs, the first input being for carrying optical energy according to a first channel plan identifying a first center frequency and a first plurality of wavelength channels with a first constant channel spacing, and the second input being for carrying optical energy according to a second channel plan identifying a second center frequency and a second plurality of wavelength channels with a second constant channel spacing, the first and second center frequencies being different,
wherein the first input is disposed such that optical energy according to the first channel plan provided on the first input will, using a first order m1 of the waveguide array, image first, second and third adjacent channels of the first channel plan on the far boundary at respective angles θOP1, θOP2 and θOP3 measured relative to where the array centerline meets the output free-space region,
and wherein the second input is disposed such that optical energy according to the second channel plan provided on the second input will, using a second order m2 of the waveguide array different from the first order m1, image first, second and third adjacent channels of the second channel plan on the far boundary at substantially the respective angles θOP1, θOP2 and θOP3, each of the first, second and third channels in the second channel plan having a wavelength that differs from all of the first, second and third channels in the first channel plan.
2. Apparatus according to
where θIP1 and θIP2 substantially satisfy
where ν1N1 is the first center frequency, Δ(ν1N1) being the first channel spacing,
where ν2N2 is the second center frequency, Δ(ν2N2) being the second channel spacing,
where da is a pitch of the array waveguides where they meet the input free space region,
where c is the speed of light in a vacuum,
and where Ns1 is the effective index of refraction in the input free space region at frequency ν1, Ns2 is the effective index of refraction in the input free space region at frequency ν2, N1 is the effective index of refraction of a waveguide in the waveguide array at frequency ν1, N2 is the effective index of refraction of a waveguide in the waveguide array at frequency ν2,
and where Δ(ν1N1)/ Δ(ν2N2) substantially satisfies
3. Apparatus according to
4. Apparatus according to
5. Apparatus according to
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24. A system according to
25. A system according to
26. A system according to
a first WDM filter/combiner having two inputs in optical communication with respectively the first and second outputs of the first awg and an output in communication with a first end of the single optical fiber; and
a second WDM filter/combiner having one input in communication with a second end of the single optical fiber and two outputs in optical communication with respectively the first and second inputs of the second awg.
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Applicants hereby claim the benefit under 35 U.S.C. 119(e) of U.S. provisional application No. 61/392,131, filed 12 Oct. 2010. The provisional application is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates generally to optical waveguide grating devices, and more particularly to a device that simultaneously supports more than one frequency band with accurate channel spacing.
2. Description of Related Art
Computer and communication systems place an ever-increasing demand upon communication link bandwidths. It is generally known that optical fibers offer a much higher bandwidth than conventional coaxial links. Further, a single optical channel in a fiber waveguide uses a small fraction of the available bandwidth of the fiber. In wavelength division multiplexed (WDM) optical communication systems, multiple optical wavelength carriers transmit independent communication channels along a single optical fiber. By transmitting several channels at different wavelengths into one fiber, the bandwidth capability of an optical fiber is efficiently utilized.
Fiber-optic multiplexing and demultiplexing have been accomplished using an arrayed waveguide grating (AWG) device. An AWG is a planar structure comprising an array of waveguides disposed between input and output couplers and arranged side-by-side with each other, and which together act like a diffraction grating in a spectrometer. Each of the waveguides differs in length with respect to its nearest neighbor by a predetermined fixed amount. The outputs of the output coupler form the outputs of the multiplexing and demultiplexing device. In operation, when a plurality of separate and distinct wavelengths are applied to separate and distinct input ports of the device, they are combined and are transmitted to an output port. The same device may also perform a demultiplexing function in which a plurality of input wavelengths on one input port of the apparatus, are separated from each other and directed to predetermined different ones of the output ports. AWGs can also perform a routing function, in which signals arrive on multiple input ports and are routed to multiple different output ports in accordance with a predefined mapping. The construction and operation of such AWGs is well known in the art. See for example, “PHASAR-based WDM-Devices: Principles, Design and Applications”, M K Smit, IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics Vol. 2, No. 2, June 1996; U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,002,350; 7,397,986; 7,492,991; and WO97/23969, all incorporated by reference herein.
AWGs are often used in WDM-PON (wavelength division multiplexing passive optical network) systems. A typical PON has an optical line terminal (OLT) at the service provider's central office and a number of optical network units (ONUs) near end users. Each OLT and ONU includes one or more AWGs, so that multiple channels on different transmission frequencies can be carried on a single fiber. The AWGs multiplex the channels from multiple inputs at one end, and demultiplex them into multiple outputs at the other end. In order to permit such systems to be deployed with AWGs from a variety of vendors, several wavelength “bands” have been defined, and the channel spacing within each band has also been defined. These definitions have been incorporated into standards mainly under the auspices of the International Telecommunications Union (ITU). The following spectral bands have been defined in ITU specifications:
Classification of spectral bands
Band
Descriptor
Range [nm]
O-band
Original
1260 to 1360
E-band
Extended
1360 to 1460
S-band
Short wavelength
1460 to 1530
C-band
Conventional/Center
1530 to 1565
L-band
Long wavelength
1565 to 1625
U-band
Ultra long wavelength
1625 to 1675
The channel plans specified for three of these bands (L-, C- and S-Bands) are set forth in
Though the ITU grid shows as many as 50 channels usable in each band, for some applications it is desirable to carry channels in two or more bands. For example, it is often proposed in literature to use AWGs in a bidirectional transmission system, with one band of frequencies for upstream traffic, from ONU to OLT, and another band of frequencies for downstream traffic, from OLT to ONU. This can be achieved by using two separate AWGs on each end of the transmission path, one designed for each of the two bands. The multiplexed outputs of the two AWGs on one end are either carried separately to the other end on two separate fibers, or are combined onto a single fiber using a WDM filter/combiner. However, it would be preferable if a single AWG could suffice on each end. It is possible to use a single AWG to multiplex/demultiplex signals in more than one band, but a number of problems arise.
First, in a conventional AWG, the channel spacing is proportional to the order addressed by the AWG. For example, designs have been made which can be deployed in both the C-band and L-band using order 38 and order 37 respectively. But if the design addresses the ITU-grid with channel spacing of 100 GHz using AWG-order 38 in the C-band, then the same AWG would have a channel spacing of 37/38*100=97.4 GHz, operating on order 37, in the L-band. It would deviate from the ITU specification and therefore be incompatible with AWGs on the far end of the transmission path that are designed for the standard 100 GHz spacing.
It has consequently been proposed to change the ITU specification to allow an off-grid channel spacing for the second band. But this creates another problem in that it is difficult to standardize the second channel plan. This is due to the fact that the two bands of frequencies, in particular the separation between the two bands, is defined by technology parameters used in the manufacture of the AWG, such as the material and waveguide dispersion, which vary from manufacturer to manufacturer.
To illustrate this point,
for high and low contrast respectively. All frequencies in the table are in THz.
It can be seen that both AWGs are designed for 100 GHz on-grid channel spacing on order 38 in the C-band. But the resulting L-Band channel plans are different. The L-band channels for the higher contrast technology is 24 GHz higher than for low contrast technology. Therefore a WDM-PON AWG made in one technology will not be compatible in the L-band with a WDM-PON AWG made in the other technology. This is one of the reasons why it has been difficult to define an industry standard for the channel plan for WDM-PON telecom systems. Furthermore, even if all manufacturers can agree on one off-grid channel plan for the second frequency band, that plan will soon become obsolete as future improvements in manufacturing technologies dictate still different channel plans for the second channel.
An opportunity therefore arises to develop ways to design a single AWG which operates at the correct channel spacing in two or more frequency bands simultaneously.
Roughly described, the invention involves arrayed waveguide grating apparatus having an input free-space region, an output free-space region, and an array of waveguides from the input free-space region to the output free-space region, wherein the input free-space region has an input port comprising at least first and second inputs, wherein the output free-space region has an output port comprising a plurality of outputs, wherein the first and second input ports address respectively first and second different orders M1 and M2 of the waveguide array, wherein the plurality of outputs and the first input are disposed such that optical energy provided on the first input will appear on the outputs with a first center frequency ν1N1 and first channel spacing Δ(ν1N1) among the outputs, N1 being the effective index of refraction of a waveguide in the waveguide array at frequency ν1, the outputs being positioned for constant channel spacing between each pair of adjacent ones of the plurality of outputs when operated at the first center frequency, and wherein the second input is disposed such that optical energy provided on the second input will appear on the plurality of outputs with a desired second center frequency ν2N2 and second channel spacing Δ(ν2N2) among the outputs.
Preferably, the first and second inputs are disposed across the input free-space region from the array at angles θIP1 and θIP2 measured relative to where the array centerline meets the input free-space region,
where θIP1 and θIP2 substantially satisfy
where da is a pitch of the array waveguides where they meet the input free space region,
where c is the speed of light, and where Ns1 is the effective index of refraction in the input free space region at frequency ν1, Ns2 is the effective index of refraction in the input free space region at frequency ν2, N1 the effective index of refraction of a waveguide in the waveguide array at frequency ν1, N2 the effective index of refraction of a waveguide in the waveguide array at frequency ν2,
and where Δ(ν1N1)/Δ(ν2N2) substantially satisfies
The first and second center frequencies may be in different ones of the ITU-defined frequency bands, for example in respectively the C-band and L-band. As another example, they may be located in two different sub-bands of a single one of the ITU-defined frequency bands.
Preferably the first and second orders are related as M2=M1−1.
In an embodiment, the first and second channel spacings are substantially equal to each other. Preferably they are both equal to 50 GHz, and the first and second center frequencies both lie substantially on multiples of 50 GHz. In another embodiment, the first and second channel spacings are both substantially equal to 50 GHz and the first and second center frequencies both lie on multiples of 50 GHz. In yet another embodiment, the first and second channel spacings are both substantially equal to 50 GHz and the first and second center frequencies both lie substantially on multiples of 50 GHz.
The AWGs are operated so as to carry channels from both bands simultaneously.
The AWGs may also be implemented in a system that includes a first AWG having a plurality of inputs and a set of at least first and second outputs and a second AWG having at least first and second inputs and a plurality of outputs, for use with a transmission path carrying first optical energy from the first output of the first AWG to the first input of the second AWG and from the second output of the first AWG to the second input of the second AWG. The first and second outputs of the first AWG address respectively first and second different orders of the first AWG such that optical energy carried on the first output of the first AWG has a plurality of channels having first desired channel spacing and a first desired center frequency and at the same time optical energy carried on the second output of the first AWG has a plurality of channels having second desired channel spacing and a second desired center frequency. Similarly, the first and second inputs of the second AWG address respectively first and second different orders of the second AWG such that optical energy carried on the first input of the second AWG has a plurality of channels having the first channel spacing and the first center frequency and at the same time optical energy carried on the second input of the second AWG has a plurality of channels having the second channel spacing and the second center frequency. The first and second AWGs may be fabricated with the same or different technology parameters, and the first and second orders on which the first AWG is operated need not match the first and second orders on which the second AWG is operated. The different technology parameters may include different materials, different waveguide dispersions, and different sums of material and waveguide dispersion.
In one configuration the transmission path includes two optical fibers, one carrying the first optical energy and the other carrying the second optical energy.
In another configuration the transmission path has only a single optical fiber. The system in this configuration further includes a first WDM filter/combiner having two inputs in optical communication with respectively the first and second outputs of the first AWG and an output in communication with a first end of the single optical fiber, and a second WDM filter/combiner having one input in communication with a second end of the single optical fiber and two outputs in optical communication with respectively the first and second inputs of the second AWG.
The above summary of the invention is provided in order to provide a basic understanding of some aspects of the invention. This summary is not intended to identify key or critical elements of the invention or to delineate the scope of the invention. Its sole purpose is to present some concepts of the invention in a simplified form as a prelude to the more detailed description that is presented later. Particular aspects of the invention are described in the claims, specification and drawings.
The invention will be described with respect to specific embodiments thereof, and reference will be made to the drawings, in which:
The following description is presented to enable any person skilled in the art to make and use the invention, and is provided in the context of a particular application and its requirements. Various modifications to the disclosed embodiments will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art, and the general principles defined herein may be applied to other embodiments and applications without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. Thus, the present invention is not intended to be limited to the embodiments shown, but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the principles and features disclosed herein.
The present technology addresses the above limitations, in one or more improvements, separately or together. It allows an AWG to be designed using any set of technology parameters which will multiplex or demultiplex channels in two or more frequency bands or sub-bands simultaneously, having virtually any desired frequency spacing between the bands or sub-bands, and virtually any desired channel spacing inside each of the bands or sub-bands. For example, it allows definition of a channel plan on two different bands simultaneously with almost identical channel spacing in one band as in the other. It also allows design of an AWG with arbitrary separation between two frequency bands simultaneously. In practice it is often desired to have all the frequencies to be multiples of 50 GHz, thereby maintaining compatibility with the existing ITU grid. Roughly described, the present technology achieves this using a dual input AWG as shown in
One of the inputs is used for one band of frequencies, say the C-band, and the other input carries the other band of frequencies, say the L-band. In another example, an AWG is designed which operates in the blue and red sub-bands of the C-band respectively. The sub bands can be defined arbitrarily. Although the industry has not yet decided what bands of frequencies will be used for WDM-PON, the technology disclosed herein is applicable to any combination of sub-bands from any combination of bands. For example it could be S-band and C-band, or C-band and L-band or any sub-band of C-band and any sub-band of L-band. The ITU standard, the frequencies being multiples of 50 GHz, is currently used in DWDM telecom systems. It is expected to use those same frequencies in any future telecom architectures, like WDM-PON, as well. This is because it enables the use of existing components. However, in other embodiments, the present technology is applicable to multiples other than 50 GHz, higher than 50 GHZ or lower than 50 GHz.
Prior art instances of dual input cyclic AWGs operate on one sub-band at a time, because they were developed as an inventory reduction alternative to single input cyclic AWG. These AWGs can operate with one selectable sub-band at a time, but not multiple sub-bands simultaneously. The reason for this limitation with prior art AWGs, is that only one sub-band at a time is required to maintain compatibility with the telecom system which uses the single input AWG. Problems with ITU wavelength error are acknowledged but remain unresolved, such as in U.S. Pat. No. 6,608,948. In such designs techniques such as different temperature set point, stressing devices, and moving input position are used to shift the center frequency depending on the frequency band for which it is to be deployed. In the case of a dual input AWG these techniques shift the center frequency of both inputs simultaneously, so if they are adjusted to provide correct channel spacing or center frequency for one band, they would not be accurate for the other band.
Indeed, the approach described herein can be extended to more than two inputs for more than two frequency bands. But in current applications, like WDM-PON two bands of frequencies is most relevant.
As will be shown mathematically in a later section, an angular displacement of the input will shift the frequency of the L-band or red frequencies relative to the C-band or blue frequencies. The displacement is angular. Hence, this shift of the input allows one to freely design the frequency separation between the two bands. On top of that, and more importantly, it is known that the displacement of the input also modifies the channel-spacing. The combined change of channel spacing, a decrease due to operation in a lower order for the L-band or red frequencies, and an increase or decrease in channel spacing due to the displacement of the input, results in almost any arbitrary channel spacing, as desired.
There are three design parameters which can be chosen more or less freely: the order of the frequency band of input 1, the order of the frequency band of input 2, and the angular displacement of input 2 relative to input 1. Apart from the restriction that the order is an integer, this allows the designer to achieve both correct frequency separation of bands AND correct channel spacing.
It is possible to achieve correct channel spacing and almost exact frequency separation (<±2 GHz difference for practical purpose for AWG working with one band in C band and another in L-band) or it is possible to achieve correct frequency separation and almost exact channel spacing. (better than 0.2% for AWG working with one band in C band and another in L-band) or any combination, such as both nearly exact frequency separation and nearly exact channel spacing.
A far field image of the input optical energy for each of the inputs is developed on the far boundary 714 of the input free space region 712. At this boundary the light enters the input end 716 of a waveguide array 718 which consists of tens or hundreds of individual waveguides. The array waveguides are of lengths which increase linearly across the array, each waveguide having a length which differs from its nearest adjacent waveguide by a value ΔL.
Optical energy exits the waveguide array 716 at an output end 720 thereof, and delivers the light into an “output slab” region 722. Like the input slab, the output slab region is a planar waveguide which confines the input optical energy in only the vertical dimension. The energy is permitted to spread transversely without restriction, and for that reason the output slab is sometimes referred to herein as an “output free space region”, or an “output free propagation region”. In some embodiments the input and output free space regions overlap each other such that the input and output beams cross each other. Note that it is assumed herein that the input and output free-space region have identical refractive index. The formulas set forth herein can be easily modified accordingly if this is not the case in a particular embodiment.
A diffraction pattern is developed on the far boundary 724 of the output free space region 722, where the light enters a set of one or more output optical waveguides 726. Considering one of the input waveguides 710, for example IP1, the structure can be used as a demultiplexer for WDM signals carried on IP1. Thus information can be carried on multiple channels (wavelengths) in IP1 and the channels are separated out by the AWG for delivery into the different output waveguides 726. The structure can also be used as a multiplexer if operated in reverse.
Because of the bidirectional nature of the optical components described herein, as used herein, the terms “input” and “output” are used only to distinguish between the two ends of the device, and not to indicate which direction the light travels. That is, a particular device might include two ports A and B. If used in one way, light may travel from port A to port B whereas if operated in reverse, light may travel from port B to port A. As used herein, port A may be called the “input” and port B the “output”, but this does not preclude operating the device in such a way that light travels from port B to port A. In fact in many embodiments herein, light travels in both directions simultaneously. Thus description herein describes the structure of the device, which does not change if operated with light traveling in the opposite direction.
It will be appreciated that while the free space regions are often though of as having structural features to mark their boundaries, in fact in many cases structural features are unnecessary; the waveguides of the waveguide array 718 and the output waveguides input or output waveguides 710 or 726 can merely terminate at positions corresponding to the arcs that are shown in
As mentioned, optical energy provided on one of the inputs IP1 carrying signals on multiple wavelengths, are separated out by the AWG for delivery into the different output waveguides 726. The well-known grating equation is typically used to determine where to position the receivers for the output waveguides 726. The grating equation gives the positions of the receivers as angular offsets from the array centerline in the output free space region 722, and they depend on technology parameters of the device (such as the pitch da of the array 718 waveguides where they meet the free space regions, and the effective indices of refraction of the free space regions and the array waveguides (both of which depend on the channel frequency)), the path length increment ΔL between adjacent waveguides in the array 718, the order M at which the AWG is operated, and the frequency of the particular channel which is to be captured by each receiver.
But it is desirable to be able to operate the AWG using channels in two different bands, either traveling in the same direction or in opposite directions, such that each output waveguide 726 carries two channels: one in each band. Because of the dependency on frequency, though, it can be seen that if the input waveguide IP1 were to also carry channels in a second band on the same order M, the channels would not appear at the same angular positions as required for the channels of the first band. It may be possible to operate the second band on a different order, but in order to match the angular positions appropriate for the first band, as explained previously the channel plan of the second band will not be as desired. In particular the second band would have a disadvantageous frequency spacing.
In order to overcome this problem, the AWG of
If ν1 is the desired center frequency of the IP1 frequency band and ν2 is the desired center frequency of the IP2 frequency band, then the two input waveguides IP1 and IP2 are disposed at angles θIP1 and θIP2 measured relative to the array centerline, where θIP1 and θIP2 satisfy
where da is a pitch of the array waveguides where they meet the input free space region, c is the speed of light in a vacuum, Ns1 is the effective index of refraction in the input free space region at frequency ν1, Ns2 is the effective index of refraction in the input free space region at frequency ν2, M1 is the order on which input IP1 operates, and M2 is the order on which input IP2 operates. N1 is the effective index of refraction of a waveguide in the waveguide array at frequency ν1, and N2 is the effective index of refraction of a waveguide in the waveguide array at frequency ν2.
Furthermore, the ratio of channel spacings for the two bands, Δ(ν1N1)/Δ(ν2N2), satisfies
Using the above equations and the grating equation, it is possible to select values for θIP1, θIP2, M1, and M2, such that input IP1 carries frequencies in a first band having virtually any desired center frequency ν1 and channel spacing Δ(ν1N1), and input IP2 carries frequencies in a second band having virtually any other desired center frequency ν2 and any channel spacing Δ(ν2N2), and the resulting channel plans will appear coincidently on a single plurality of output receivers for output waveguides 726. The only significant limitation in the precision with which the resulting center frequencies and channel spacings will exactly match desired values is the requirement that the orders be integers.
C-band-L-band WDM-PON Example
As an example,
Blue-Red WDM-PON Example
A red-blue channel plan which is within a few GHz (<±2 GHz) on the ITU grid for both the red band and the blue band can be achieved as shown in the table of
For 1.55 μm wavelength, the effective index of the waveguide in the AWG-array section is 1.4568, and the effective index in the slab is 1.4624. The pitch of the array 718 waveguides at the slab-array transition is da=5 μm, and the length increment in the AWG is ΔL=41.88 μm. The angle of input IP1 is −0.05298 radian and the angle of input IP2 is 0.05298 radian. The angles of the outputs are shown in
It is noted that the channel plans for input IP1 and input IP2 overlap. This allows the use of many more channels than would be possible with a single input AWG. In the configuration of
In each of the above two examples, one for C-band and L-band and the other for Blue and Red bands, the angles of the two inputs are not centered about zero. This is not a requirement in all embodiments. Due to technology variation, it could occur that the separation between the two bands, the blue and red band, is not exactly a multiple of 100 GHz, in which case one could empirically correct for this by angularly shifting one input relative to the other. Such a correction could also be achieved by UV or heat trimming, that is creating a high or low index region in the shape of a triangle or other geometries. One example configuration of a different index region is given in
In the configuration of
Mathematical Background
The grating equation: For an AWG, the following relation holds
daNs(λ)(sin θinput+sin θoutput)+Na(λ)ΔL=Mλ
with θinput the angle of the input beam, θoutput the angle of the output beam, ΔL the array length increment, da the array pitch at the slab-array transition, λ the wavelength, and M an integer which defines the order in which AWG operates. Na is the effective index of an array waveguide and Ns is the effective index of the slab. Na is sometimes written herein merely as N.
The central wavelength λc, or central frequency νc for that matter, is a property of the array section, and corresponds to the frequency for which M times the wavelength exactly makes up the path difference. I.e. it is the frequency, for a given order M, where the angle of the input and output beam are exactly equal, but of opposite sign.
with c the constant speed of light.
The free spectral range, FSR, can be calculated from the grating equation and is given by:
The free spectral range defines the repetition rate of the spectral response in the frequency domain. Note that for any cyclic AWG, the FSR varies for the different outputs. In the above equation FSR is defined here for the output which has equal but opposite angle as the input waveguide. Also note that the FSR depends on the material and waveguide dispersion
or α. In the telecom C-band α is 0.9793 for the 1.5% contrast 4×4 um technology and α equals 0.984 for the 0.7% contrast 6×6 um Silica on Silicon technology.
The deflection of the focal spot of the array output as a function of frequency is given by:
Using the above equations, one can engineer arbitrary channel plan for both bands of frequencies.
In the two example designs set forth above, one for L-band and C-band, and one for red and blue bands of frequencies, the AWG is designed such that two bands of frequencies are mixed on the output side, both of which can be made to match the ITU grid. This is achieved by using two inputs, each of which addresses one band and where each frequency band corresponds to a different order. These channel plans are impossible to achieve with a conventional cyclic AWG using only a single input. It is noted that the above can be extended beyond two bands, by using more than 2 inputs and more than 2 orders.
Note that the order of an AWG addressed by each of the inputs is a physical characteristic of the device. It can be determined from an AWG by performing a frequency scan of the device, or by calculation given the technology parameters of the device and the path length increment between adjacent waveguides in the array.
Further Mathematical Analysis
It is desired to derive design formulas for creating arbitrary relative channel spacing for two inputs of an AWG as well as arbitrary frequency offset between the two inputs.
Rewriting the grating equation in terms of frequency rather than wavelength one obtains:
with c the speed of light and ν the frequency of light. For most practical purpose it can be assumed that the ratio of the slab index to the array index is constant for the frequency range of interest. This further simplifies the grating equation to
From the above grating equation it can be concluded that for each combination of input and output one has the following invariant.
This holds for each integer M, so, for example it follows that for input 1 and for any given output the following relation between frequencies of different orders M1, M2 holds.
M1ν1M2N1M2=M2ν1M1N1M1 (eq. 1)
where M1 is one integer order, and M2 another. For a given output, ν1M2is the frequency from input 1 operating on order M2, and ν1M1 and is the frequency from input 1 operating on order M1, N1M2 is the array index at frequency ν1M2 and N1M1 is the array index at frequency ν1M1. [In the following, whenever the superscript is missing it is assumed that order M1 is meant for input 1 and order M2 is meant for input 2.]
From this, the increment Δ(νN)of νN between adjacent receiver waveguides is proportional to the order of the AWG.
M1Δ(ν1M2N1M2)=M2Δ(νN1) (eq. 2)
The above equations describe how, for a given input and output, frequency and frequency spacing of an AWG alters by changing the order from M1 to M2 . It is clear that frequency and frequency spacing change by the same relative magnitude. As stated before this is undesired and we want to be able to modify frequency and frequency spacing independently. For this purpose we create a second input, operating on order M2, which has input angle θIP2. Any more inputs can be created of course.
From the grating equation it follows that, for any given output angle,
Shifting the input, changes the frequency but also changes the frequency spacing between adjacent receivers. For the situation where both inputs operate on the same order, M1=M2 it can be calculated to be described by the following equation
Using eq. 1 and eq. 3, the total change in frequency spacing for input IP2 operating on order M2 relative to input 1 operating on order M1 is given by:
which, using eq. 2, can be expressed as
This equation, eq. 4, is sometimes referred to herein as the model equation.
Using the above equation one can now readily calculate the frequency separation between the two inputs as a function of the relative channel spacing, M1, M2 and the frequency of input IP1 for a given output. For demonstration purposes it is assumed that the index N is independent of frequency and taking κ=2, neglecting the quadratic terms in relative frequency change, the equation reduces to:
Taking Δν1 equal to 100 GHz, ν1=194.0 THz, it is shown in
In
The dual input AWG techniques described herein need not be used only for implementing the ITU grid frequencies. In order to demonstrate this,
The above examples are calculated for a situation with zero waveguide and material dispersion, α=1.0. However, arbitrary channel plans can be achieved also in the presence of waveguide and material dispersion. Using this approach, having multiple inputs operating on different order, allows one to make channel plans agnostic to the technology parameters in which the AWGs are fabricated.
Another benefit of the multi-input AWGs here described over a single input cyclic AWG is that the two inputs can each have empirical corrections. For example by UV-writing prisms in the path of each beam (triangular regions of different index) or moving one input relative to the other(s) by other means.
The model equation gives solutions for M1 and M2, ν1 and ν2, etc. In order to calculate the input and output angles one should use the grating equation, or deflection equation for each of the inputs
where it should be noted that νc itself depends on the grating order, M1 for input 1, and M2 for input 2, and so on for cases of more than 2 inputs.
A typical design process, knowing the various indices of refraction and desired center frequencies and channel spacings for each of the inputs, might proceed as follows.
First, using eq. 4 (or a simplification thereof), select orders M1 and M2=M1−1 that best satisfy the desired values. This may be most easily accomplished by preparing charts such as
Next, select an input angle for IP1 and select any output angle, such as 0 radians. Given this information, together with the frequencies and the orders just selected, the grating equation is used to determine the length increment ΔL between adjacent waveguides in the array.
Next, now that the orders M1 and M2 and ΔL are known, the equation above relating sin θIP2 to sin θIP1 and ΔL is used to calculate the required angular spacing between the inputs.
Next, the grating equation is used to calculate the required angles for all the output receivers. This calculation can be done for either of the inputs since both should yield the same angles for the output receivers.
Finally, empirical adjustments can be made as previously described.
Accordingly, a technique has been described in which an AWG has at least first and second inputs, the first input being for carrying optical energy according to a first channel plan identifying a first center frequency and a first plurality of wavelength channels with a first constant channel spacing, and the second input being for carrying optical energy according to a second channel plan identifying a second center frequency and a second plurality of wavelength channels with a second constant channel spacing, the first and second center frequencies being different,
wherein the first input is disposed such that optical energy according to the first channel plan provided on the first input will, using a first order M1 of the waveguide array, image first, second and third adjacent channels of the first channel plan on the far boundary at respective angles θOP1, θOP2 and θOP3 measured relative to where the array centerline meets the output free-space region,
and wherein the second input is disposed such that optical energy according to the second channel plan provided on the second input will, using a second order M2of the waveguide array different from the first order M1, image first, second and third adjacent channels of the second channel plan on the far boundary at substantially the respective angles, θOP1, θOP2 and θOP3 each of the first, second and third channels in the second channel plan having a wavelength that differs from all of the first, second and third channels in the first channel plan.
Some Practical Considerations
It has already been mentioned that because the orders addressed by the inputs to the AWG must be integers, the equations and techniques described herein may not achieve desired channel plans and frequency separations exactly, though they can be made extremely close. Some examples described herein for example achieve a channel spacing which deviates by no more than 2 GHz from a desired 100 GHz channel spacing. If a device is made according to the equations and techniques described herein, it is still considered to achieve the desired channel plans and frequency separations “substantially”.
Additionally, in a real device making use of the concepts described herein, it will be appreciated that it may be either impossible or commercially unnecessary to match the equations set forth above exactly. For example, the devices may deviate from the equations due to ordinary manufacturing tolerances. A real device which deviates from the equations set forth above for any of these reasons, is considered herein still to satisfy the equations “substantially”. Since such devices still make use of the novel concepts taught herein they can be made with much better accuracy than conventional devices, even though they do not satisfy the equations exactly. Furthermore, whereas virtually any desired channel plan and frequency separation can be achieved using the equations and techniques described herein, it will be appreciated that an embodiment can still come closer to desired channel plans and frequency separations than can conventional devices and techniques, if the equations and techniques described herein are used with a small spoiling factor. Embodiments such as this are still considered herein to take advantage of the equations and techniques described herein and are therefore still considered to satisfy the equations “substantially”.
The applicant hereby discloses in isolation each individual feature described herein and any combination of two or more such features, to the extent that such features or combinations are capable of being carried out based on the present specification as a whole in light of the common general knowledge of a person skilled in the art, irrespective of whether such features or combinations of features solve any problems disclosed herein, and without limitation to the scope of the claims. The applicant indicates that aspects of the present invention may consist of any such feature or combination of features. In view of the foregoing description it will be evident to a person skilled in the art that various modifications may be made within the scope of the invention.
The foregoing description of preferred embodiments of the present invention has been provided for the purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed. Obviously, many modifications and variations will be apparent to practitioners skilled in this art. In particular, and without limitation, any and all variations described, suggested or incorporated by reference in the Background section of this patent application are specifically incorporated by reference into the description herein of embodiments of the invention. In addition, any and all variations described, suggested or incorporated by reference herein with respect to any one embodiment are also to be considered taught with respect to all other embodiments. The embodiments described herein were chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the invention and its practical application, thereby enabling others skilled in the art to understand the invention for various embodiments and with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the following claims and their equivalents.
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